Deer Summer Sausage Recipe 435 Recipes

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VENISON SUMMER SAUSAGE



Venison Summer Sausage image

This is an old school variety of summer sausage that is fully cured. Many modern versions are not, and must be refrigerated or they will spoil quickly. This is more like a salami; if you want that softer summer sausage texture, hang for less time.

Provided by Hank Shaw

Categories     Cured Meat     Snack

Time 7h

Number Of Ingredients 15

3 ½ pounds venison
1 pound fatty pork shoulder
½ pound pork fatback
51 grams salt
6 grams Instacure No. 2
10 grams dextrose, (or granulated sugar if you can't get it)
1 tablespoon cracked black pepper
1 tablespoon coarsely ground coriander seed
2 teaspoons coarsely ground mustard seed
1 teaspoon powdered ginger
½ teaspoon ground cloves
¼ cup malt vinegar
1/2 cup distilled water
10 grams F-LC or FRM-52 starter culture
Hog casings (preferably 38-42 mm wide casings)

Steps:

  • Cut the meat and fat into chunks that will fit into your grinder. Trim as much sinew and silverskin as you can. Put the fat into a container in the fridge. Mix the dextrose, salt and curing salt with the meats and put it in the fridge overnight. This helps develop myosin, which will give you a tighter bind when you stuff the links later.
  • The next day, put your grinding equipment - blade, coarse and fine die, etc. - in the freezer. Mix the ginger, cloves and half of the remaining spices with the meat and fat. Put the mixture into the freezer and let everything chill down until it hits about 30°F or so. It won't freeze solid because of the salt. Normally, this takes about 90 minutes. While you're waiting, soak about 15 feet of hog casings in a bowl of warm water, and put the malt vinegar in the fridge.
  • When the meat and fat are cold, take them out and grind through the coarse die of the grinder; I use a 10 mm plate. Test the temperature of the mixture, and if it's 35°F or colder, go ahead and grind it all again through a fine die, like a 4.5 mm. If it's warmer than 35°F, put the mix back in the freezer to chill. This might take an hour or so if you've let the meat warm up too much. Use the time to clean up, and to dissolve your starter culture in the distilled water.
  • Once the sausage has been ground twice, test the temperature again to make sure it's 35°F or colder. I prefer to chill the mix down to 28°F to 32°F for this next stage. Chill the mix and when it's cold enough, take it out and add the remaining spices, the vinegar and the water-starter culture mixture. Now, mix and knead this all up in a big bin or bowl with your (very clean) hands for a solid 2 minutes-your hands will ache with cold, which is good. You want everything to almost emulsify.
  • Stuff the sausage into hog casings rather loosely. For this sausage, you want long links. First cut lengths of casing about 2 feet long. Stuff each with a little more than 1 foot's worth of sausage, leaving with plenty of extra casing on either side. Do this with all the sausage before moving on.
  • When you're ready, gently compress the long links. Keep an eye out for air pockets. Use a sterile needle or sausage pricker (set it aglow in your stovetop flame) to puncture the casing over all the air pockets. Gently compress the links together to squeeze out the air pockets; this takes practice. Tie the ends of the casing together in a double or triple knot.
  • Hang the links from a clothes rack or somesuch. I use "S" rings you buy from the hardware store to hang them from the clothes rack rods. Now you need to ferment your links, keeping them warm and moist. I do this by putting a humidifier under the hanging sausages and then tenting the whole shebang with big garbage bags that I've sliced open on one end. I also use a water sprayer to spritz my sausages a couple times a day. Doing this prevents the casings from hardening. Keep your sausages hanging at room temperature (65 to 80°F) at about 85 percent humidity for three days.
  • Move the sausages to your smoker and smoke them over very low heat for up to 4 hours of continuous smoke. It is vitally important that you do not cook your links here, so put ice in the water tray of the smoker and smoke on a cold day or in the early morning. Don't let the smoker rise above 100°F at all. If it gets too hot, open the door of the smoker or just take the links out.
  • Now you need to dry your sausages and turn them into salami. Hang them in a place that is about 50°F to 60°F with about 80 to 90 percent humidity. In most cases you will need to put a humidifier under your links. I also spritz them with water once a day for the first 2 weeks. After the first week of hanging, drop the humidity to 70 to 80 percent. On the third week drop it again to 65 to 70 percent and hold it there until a total of 4 to 8 weeks has elapsed since the salami went into the chamber.
  • You now have boerenmetworst. To store long-term, vacuum seal them individually and keep in the fridge. They will last indefinitely this way, and the vacuum sealing will keep them from becoming rock hard. You can also freeze them.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 168 kcal, Carbohydrate 1 g, Protein 17 g, Fat 10 g, SaturatedFat 4 g, Cholesterol 67 mg, Sodium 833 mg, Fiber 1 g, Sugar 1 g, UnsaturatedFat 6 g, ServingSize 1 serving

WILD GAME SUMMER SAUSAGE RECIPE



Wild Game Summer Sausage Recipe image

There are three main reasons I love summer sausage. First, it's virtually indestructible. You can bring it along on backpack hunts and camping trips without having to worry about it going bad or getting crushed inside your backpack or cooler. Second, I love it because it's flavored heavily enough to...

Provided by Steven Rinella

Number Of Ingredients 13

8 lbs. game meat, cut into 1-inch cubes
2 lbs. pork fatback, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
6 tbsp. kosher salt
4 tbsp. dextrose
2 tsp. curing salt (often sold as pink salt # 1)
1-1/2 tbsp. mustard seeds
1 tbsp. dry mustard
2 tsp. garlic powder
2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
2 tsp. ground ginger
1 cup Fermento
1 cup water
Four 2-1/2-by-18-inch collagen casings

Steps:

  • While keeping everything ice cold (see methods for fresh sausage), combine the game meat, pork fat, and all of the other ingredients except for the Fermento, water, and casings in a large bowl.
  • Mix to combine with your hands. Work in small batches if you need to, and don't be afraid to throw the meat back in the fridge or freezer, or into a cooler with ice, to get chilled again.
  • Using the 1/4-inch plate on your grinder, grind the meat mixture into the bowl set over ice.
  • Change out the grinder plate to the 3/16-inch plate and pass the mixture through the grinder again.
  • Meanwhile, dissolve the Fermento in the water and stir with a spoon.
  • Add to the ground meat mixture and again mix with your hands, or throw the meat mixture in the bowl of a standing mixer and mix on low, until it's all incorporated.
  • Press a piece of plastic wrap over the surface of the meat, making sure there are no air bubbles. Then wrap the bowl with a second layer of plastic wrap and set it in the fridge for 2 days to ferment.
  • Make a little test patty and cook it up in a sauté pan to be sure you got the seasonings right. Adjust them if you didn't. Then, using a sausage stuffer, stuff the sausage into the casings.
  • Let the stuffed casings rest in the fridge to dry out for 1-2 hours.
  • While the stuffed sausages are resting, soak a panful of applewood chips for 20 minutes.
  • Preheat the smoker to 112°-130°.
  • Set the pan of chips in the smoker. Lay or hang the sausages in the smoker.
  • Smoke for about 60 minutes at this temperature, then raise the temperature to 180°.
  • Smoke until the internal temperature reaches 150°, which will probably take 2-3 hours, depending on your particular smoker and the ambient temperature.
  • Keep refilling the pan of apple wood chips as they get low.
  • When the sausages are done, let them hang at room temperature for 1 hour to cool, then wrap well and refrigerate. They can be frozen for several months.

VENISON CHEDDAR-JALAPENO SUMMER SAUSAGE



Venison Cheddar-Jalapeno Summer Sausage image

This is a nice change from regular summer sausage. The cheddar and jalapenos give it a bit of a spicy kick that is sure to please at gatherings. We serve this at the 'Beast Feasts' we host every year where all the dishes are from wild game. This recipe works well with beef as well.

Provided by Emily Tisdale

Categories     Meat and Poultry Recipes     Game Meats     Venison

Time P1DT2h

Yield 40

Number Of Ingredients 9

1 cup cold water
3 tablespoons sugar-based curing mixture (such as Morton® Tender Quick®)
2 teaspoons mustard seed
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon coarse ground black pepper
2 teaspoons liquid smoke flavoring
3 pounds lean ground venison
1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
2 jalapeno peppers, seeded and minced

Steps:

  • Stir the water, curing mixture, mustard seed, garlic powder, black pepper, and liquid smoke in a large bowl until the curing mixture has dissolved. Mix in the ground venison, Cheddar cheese, and jalapeno peppers; mix until evenly blended and somewhat sticky, about 3 minutes. Divide the mixture in half, and roll each half into 2 inch thick logs. Wrap each log tightly with aluminum foil, and refrigerate for 24 hours.
  • Preheat an oven to 300 degrees F (150 degrees C). Line a baking sheet with aluminum foil, then remove the foil from the sausage logs, and place them onto the baking sheet.
  • Bake in the preheated oven until the internal temperature reaches 170 degrees F (75 degrees C), 1 1/2 to 2 hours. Cool the sausages on a rack until they have cooled to room temperature. Dab occasionally with a paper towel to absorb excess grease. Slice thinly to serve.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 48.4 calories, Carbohydrate 0.2 g, Cholesterol 26.8 mg, Fat 1.9 g, Fiber 0.1 g, Protein 7.2 g, SaturatedFat 0.9 g, Sodium 552.5 mg, Sugar 0.1 g

GRAMPS' VENISON SUMMER SAUSAGE



Gramps' Venison Summer Sausage image

This recipe has been going around in our family for years. Each year around hunting season, my gramps would make this for all the hunters and family that were visiting for the season.

Provided by dcg3269

Categories     Meat and Poultry Recipes     Game Meats     Venison

Time P3DT8h20m

Yield 25

Number Of Ingredients 6

5 pounds ground venison
2 tablespoons sugar-based curing mixture (such as Morton® Tender Quick®)
2 teaspoons mustard seed
2 ½ teaspoons garlic salt
2 ½ teaspoons ground black pepper
1 teaspoon liquid smoke flavoring

Steps:

  • Place the venison in a large mixing bowl. Sprinkle with the curing mixture, mustard seed, garlic salt, pepper, and liquid smoke. Mix well with your hands until the mixture is evenly blended and begins to stick together, about 2 minutes.
  • Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 3 days, mixing well each day.
  • Preheat an oven to 200 degrees F (95 degrees C).
  • Divide the mixture into 5 one-pound logs, place onto a broiler pan, and place a sheet of aluminum foil on top to cover.
  • Bake in the preheated oven until the logs are no longer pink in the center, and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the center reads 160 degrees F (70 degrees C), 6 to 8 hours. Turn the meat once or twice during cooking. Allow to cool before slicing thinly and serving.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 101.8 calories, Carbohydrate 0.3 g, Cholesterol 68.5 mg, Fat 2.4 g, Fiber 0.1 g, Protein 18.6 g, SaturatedFat 0.9 g, Sodium 774.3 mg

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